I received a four-day suspension for accepting a suggested edit that capitalized all instances of the pronoun "I", which were previously lowercase.
The suspension notice reads:
You approved poor edits to this post suggested-edits/27386987, which should have been rejected. Please pay more attention to each review in future. Being suspended can be a frustrating experience, but your help in moderation is still important. In the meantime, you can refer to What are the review queues, and how do they work? for more information, and revisit your recent reviews to see if you could have taken a different action instead.
The edit was accepted as approved the same day I reviewed it, but then I received a suspension the following day for suggesting the edit be accepted.
This is my first suspension that I'm aware of. Is there something about this I'm not understanding? It seems like this is in error and I shouldn't have been suspended.
Edit: The answers and comments so far have provided good feedback about why approving this particular edit may have been seen as punishable behavior by a moderator.
However, the instructions given to reviewers are as follows:
- Approve edits that clearly improve the post
- Improve Edit when you can make additional improvements to the post
- Reject and Edit to replace an ineffective edit with your own substantive changes
- Reject edits that fail to improve the post or that make it worse
- Skip if you are not sure and want to go to the next suggested edit
Editing a post to correct repetitively bad grammar is a clear and substantive improvement to a post.
Nowhere in the in-queue instructions does it state that—as a rule—an edit should "fix everything in the post" as @bad_coder interprets the help docs as suggesting. Nor do the instructions state that edits to closed questions must improve the question enough to make it re-openable, as Alexei details in their own personal guidelines for edits (although it's a reasonable requirement and I can understand moderators sharing this view).
I've encountered several unwritten rules like this over my years of contributions to SO. Each time it's frustrating as a user. I think either more work needs to go into making the instructions and guidance for users reflect the accepted norms moderators are enforcing, or more oversight or reminders need to be in place so that moderators consistently enforce the guidelines provided to users. As someone who reads instructions, I shouldn't have to be given a suspension and then ask a post on Meta to learn the secret proper way to fulfill my role as a contributor.
Should the instructions for the edit review queue be revised to provide more guidance?
A note for future contributors: Answers should primarily address the question "should the instructions be improved". The question is not "should this edit have been accepted".